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Instituto Federal de Te:ecomunicaci'ones
IN FORME DE COMISIÓ
2 5 NOV. 2015
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OFICINA COMISIONADA
1FT/100/PLENO/OC-ASLI/057/2015
México D.F. a 20 de noviembre de 2015
INSTITUTO FEDERAL DE TELECOMUNICACIONES
PRESENTE
En cump limiento de lo dispuesto por el artículo 23, fracción 11 de la Ley Federal de
Telecomunicaciones y Radiodifusión ("LFTR") y del artículo 15 fracción 1del Estatuto Orgánico del
Instituto Federal de Telecomunicaciones ("1FT" ), por este conducto remito a usted y para el
correspondiente conocimiento del Pleno de este H. Instituto, el informe de comisión como se
indica a continuación:
LUGAR DE COMISIÓN:
FECHA:
Guadalajara, México
25 al 26 de octubre de 2015.
CONGRESO:
Primera Conferencia Internacional del lnstitute of Electrical and
Electronics Engineers (IEEE )sobre Ciudades Inteligentes (ISC22015)
Participación como ponente en el Panel: "Smart Cities Government
ACTIVIDADES
EFECTUADAS:
Best Practices".
V INCULACIÓN CON EL
PROGRAMA ANUAL DE
. TRABAJO 2015:
Objetivo 6. Ser un regulador eficaz, imparcial, transparente y con
mejores prácticas de gestión .
Costo del transporte: $3,797.01 M XN
Costo de viáticos: $3,781.23 MXN
Costo total de la comisión: $7,578.24 MXN
COSTO TOTAL DE
VIÁTICOS:
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Insurgentes sur 1143.
'\Jocheouenc. C. P. 03720
O, - doción B·~nito Juárez.
fv'léxico. D.F.
T-5ls. (55) 501 5 ~000
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2 5 NOV. 2015
MEA
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NOMBRE Y HORA
\Mtltuto Federal de Telecomunicaciones
1
INFORME DE COMISIÓN
INSTITUTO ;:EDERAL DE
i ELECOMUNICACIONES
INTRODUCCIÓN
La primera Conferencia Internacional del IEEE sobre Smart Cities 2015 {ISC2-2015) es un evento
organizado por el Instituto de Ingenieros Eléctricos y Electrónicos (IEEE por sus siglas en inglésL
particu larmente patrocinado por el IEEE Smart Cities Steering Committee, cuyo tema central para
este año 2015 fue la Sustentabilidad.
Tomando como contexto los diversos retos que actualmente enfrentan las ciudades del mundo,
relacionados con los cambios poblacionales, el clima, la congestión en el transporte, la seguridad
pública, entre otros, el IEEE eligió estratégicamente a la ciudad de Guadalajara como cede de esta
conferencia internacional para presentar, analizar, discutir y compartir los avances que a nivel
global se están realizando para enfrentar todos estos factores cambiantes en las grandes urbes,
y con ello tratar de impulsar el desarrollo económico sostenible que la ciudad de Guadalajara ha
demostrado tener por ser una de las principales ciudades de México impulsadas por la industria.
El comité de la conferencia está integrada por expertos de alrededor de diez diferentes países de
todo el mundo, lo que permitió contar con diversas perspectivas y conocer la experiencia
internacional sobre la creación de ciudades inteligentes, a fin de compartir y crear conocimiento
entre los participantes de la conferencia.
Para más información sobre el objetivo de la conferencia y su desarrollo se sugiere consultar el
siguiente sitio de internet:
http://sites.ieee.org/isc2/
PARTICIPACIÓN COMO PONENTE EN El PANEL"SMART CITJES GOVERNMENT BEST
PRACT/CESJJ
En este panel también participaron las siguientes personas:
•
Víctor Lagunes, Jefe de la Unidad de Innovación y Estrategia Tecno lógica, Presidencia de
la República.
•
Pamela Miranda, Directora de Modernización del Comercio y los Servicios, Secretaría de
Economía.
•
Jaime Reyes, Secretario de Innovación, Ciencia y Tecnología, Gobierno de Jalisco.
•
Alfonso Fonseca, Director de Innovación Gubernamental, Gobierno de Jalisco.
Insurgentes sur 1143.
Col. Nochebuena, C.P. 03720
Delegación Benito Juórez.
México. D.F.
Tels. (55) 5015 4000
2
INFORME DE COMISIÓN
INSTITU TO FEDERA L DE
TELECOMUNICACIONES
•
Mario Arauz, Diréctor de Innovación Gubernamental, Ayuntamiento de Guadalajara.
Mi participación consistió en mencionar varias de las actividades que el Instituto Federal de
Telecomunicaciones ha estado realizando para favorecer el desarrollo de las Telecomunicaciones
en México, así como su relación para la creación de ciudades inteligentes. Los temas que
mencioné son los siguientes:
El primer dividendo digital y la banda de 700 M Hz
La transición a la televisión digital
La licitación de nuevas bandas de frecuencias para comunicaciones móviles (banda AWS)
La posibilidad de utilizar la banda de 2.5 GHz para los servicios de banda ancha móvil
La regulación sobre la compartición de infraestructura pasiva
La adaptabilidad tecnológica, la importancia de contar con puntos de intercambio de
tráfico de Internet en México, y sobre la necesidad de migrar a la versión 6 de IP (1Pv6).
El segundo dividendo digital y el despeje de la banda de 600 M Hz
l.
11.
111.
IV.
V.
VI.
VIl.
Con el fin de presentar a mayor detalle el contenido de mi participación, integro como Anexo 1
de este informe los temas que aborde, misma que realicé en idioma inglés debido a la naturaleza
de esta conferencia internacional.
Otros temas abordados por otros conferencistas fueron:
•
El Presidente de IEEE Roberto de Marca hizo una presentación sobre la prospectiva y
requerimientos de ciudades inteligentes y los proyectos en 3 ciudades: Guadalajara,
México; Trento, Italia; y Wuxi, China.
•
Se enfatizo sobre la gran importancia que tienen las colaboraciones conjuntas entre las
universidades, gobierno e industria para impulsar proyectos tan importantes como lo son
las ciudades inteligentes.
•
Se mencionaron las principales actividades que cada dependencia ha realizado en materia
de tecnología, innovación y conectividad.
•
Al respecto del punto anterior, el Jefe de la Unidad de Innovación y Estrategia Tecnológica
de la Presidencia de la República, Víctor Lagunes, mencionó los principales retos públicos
que ellos han enfrentado durante el desarrollo del proyecto México Conectado,
particularmente el concerniente a la coordinación entre dependencias del gobierno.
•
El Secretario de Innovación, Ciencia y Tecnología del Gobierno de Jalisco, Jaime Reyes,
mencionó algunas de las estrategias que han estado realizando: i) el impulso a la
Insurgentes sur 1143.
C' \lochebuen c , C .P. 03720
G.___,gcción Benito Juórez.
Mé xico, D .F.
Te ls. (55) 5015 jQQO
3
INFORME DE COMISIÓN
·, ·~
INSTITUTO FEDE R.A. L DE
i ELECOMUNIC ACIO NES
excelencia académica, ii) convenios de colaboración academia-industria, iii) movilidad,
educación y casas inteligentes, iv) exportación de proyectos mexicanos en el mercado
mundial.
•
El Director de Innovación Gubernamental del Ayuntamiento de Guadalajara, Mario Arauz,
comentó las principales actividades que el ayuntamiento ha impulsado para lograr un
gobierno innovador: proyectos focalizados para contar con ciudades creativas, energía
inteligente y mercados con presencia global. También mencionó la importancia de
impulsar mayormente la transparencia y el acceso a la información por parte de la
población.
ATENTAMENTE
COM ISIONADA
C.c.p. Juan José Crispín Borbolla, Secretario Técnico del Pleno.- Para su inclusión en la próxim a
sesión ordinaria del Pleno como asunto general.
C.c.p. Juan Carlos Hernández Wocker, Coordinador de Asuntos Internacionales - Para su
conocimiento.
C.c.p. Dr. Pascual García de Alba, Director del Centro de Estudios- Para su conocimiento
Insurgentes sur 1143.
Col. Nochebuena, C.P. 03720
Delegación Benito Juórez.
México. D.F.
Tels. (55) 5015 4000
4
INFORME DE COMISIÓN
ANEXOS
Anexo 1: Temas abordados por la Comisionada Adriana Labardini Inzunza
Smart Cities
Smart cities initiatives around the world come in all shapes and sizes, depending on the problems
they are intended to solve. This includes tackling new global challenges for making smart cites a
reality:
a) New and innovative policy and regulatory approaches,
b) Technology adaptability,
c) Sustainable energy.
As part of my participation in this panel, I would like to begin by pinpointing the key enablers that
will allow smart cities to succeed, as well as exploring the novel policies and regulatory
approaches that may be needed to reach this outcome. I would also like to share with you the
initiatives that the Federal Institute of Telecommunications has been promoting for the
foreseeable future of mobile broadband services.
Key enablers:
1. Smart devices
Smart cities need thousands of sensors in order to feed information into smart city solutions, as
well as for enabling mobile devices used by smart city residents to connect and share information
with backhaul networks.
The Federal Institute of Telecommunications has released various conformity assessments with
updated technical standards, in order to homologate and certificate smart devices for broadband
access. It has also adopted rules for the establishment of Telecommunications Certification
Bodies and the recognition of foreign testing laboratories as part of the Mutual Recognition
Agreements that Mexico has celebrated with other countries.
2. Ubiquitous connectivity – spectrum
Connectivity solutions in a smart city have to be expansive and multi-dimensional. Traditional
fixed and mobile connectivity will need to evolve and increase its capacity, but it will also be
necessary to explore other technologies such as Wi-Fi, Near Field Communication (NFC),
5
INFORME DE COMISIÓN
Bluetooth, Radio Frequency Identification (RFID), to name but a few that rely on both licensed
and unlicensed spectrum. This is very important to the success of M2M and IoT technologies.
There will also be a need to explore other connectivity solutions like TV white spaces.
TV white spaces are gaps in the radio spectrum of TV-frequency bands, which can be used to offer
new wireless applications for the benefit of local consumers and small businesses. This is
appealing for Telcos and industry because these frequencies can travel longer distances and more
easily through walls than the bands mainly used by other wireless technologies.
The challenge for regulators is to place the foundations to use TV white spaces. The key challenge
is to set the rules for sharing and managing these frequencies. This includes the technical
constrains, such as power level limits, with which devices must operate in order to avoid
interferences.
The Federal Institute of Telecommunications has diverse strategic plans for the foreseeable future
of mobile broadband services and the efficient use of spectrum. Some of them include the
clearing of TV frequency bands with the following:
A. Transition to Digital Terrestrial Television
Mexico is currently in the midst of a transition from Analogue to Digital Terrestrial Television. This
will help to:
a) Clear the 700MHz band – First digital dividend
This band has been committed for a national shared wholesale network in the frequency
range 698 – 806MHz identified as IMT band. This band has an effective 90MHz of bandwidth
and its segmentation scheme is well accepted worldwide. Also, it follows the 3GPP band 28
for LTE services. This band provides good coverage with outdoor and indoor penetration
capabilities. It also allows multicarrier configurations. Therefore, this band is crucial for the
success of smart cities
b) Start the clearing of the 600MHz band – Second digital dividend
Taking into account the technological advances and the rising of mobile broadband services,
the strategic plan also considers the use of the 600MHz band for IMT services. The main steps
involved in the clearance of the band are: i) the allocation of new TV channels below 608MHz;
ii) optimization of the spectrum allocated in the band 470 – 608MHz; and iii) development
6
INFORME DE COMISIÓN
strategies to promote the relocations of digital terrestrial television channels in the VHF
band. This band will also be a key element for smart cities.
B. The use of the 2.5GHz band
The 2.5GHz band has been identified as IMT by the ITU and Mexico has adopted the C1 band plan
that has 190MHz of bandwidth. This segmentation scheme is also well accepted worldwide and
it follows the 3GPP class 7 band for LTE services. The purpose of the Federal Institute of
Telecommunications for this band is to:
a) Define effective mechanisms for sharing the spectrum and the operation of the mobile
services, and
b) (to) Oversee the bidding process of the available segments for the provision of the mobile
broadband services.
This band might be of great use for addressing the capability challenges of Telcos in mega cities,
particularly for indoor coverage.
3. Infrastructure sharing and access:
For ubiquitous connectivity in smart cities it is fundamental to ensure that high-speed services
can be deployed efficiently and that unnecessary duplication is avoided. To achieve this outcome,
it may be necessary to facilitate access to, and sharing of, facilities and infrastructure. The aim is
to allow sensors and other smart components to be efficiently installed and collocated in towers,
buildings and key structures.
In order to achieve this, regulation may be necessary to ensure developers and landowners to
provide access to key structures, which would allow operators to efficiently install telecoms
infrastructure thus facilitating the proliferation of smart city solutions. The lack of such access
might be a significant hindrance for smart cities.
The Federal Institute of Telecommunications, as part of the regulations imposed to the incumbent
in telecommunications, has determined that passive infrastructure of the incumbent must be
available to other concessionaries of public telecommunications networks on a nondiscriminatory basis. This means that the incumbent must allow concessionaries to access and
share its passive infrastructure. The aim of these regulations is to allow market balance and fast
deployment of infrastructure for broadband services.
4. Data sharing and access:
7
INFORME DE COMISIÓN
Smart cities will require the input of multiple IT, technological, and governmental stakeholders
order to collect, share, communicate, and process and secure data from different systems and
services such as smart grids, intelligent transport, smart buildings, telecommunication service
providers, just to name a few, in order to work together in an unified way. With this in mind, and
considering the high degree of personalization required for smart city solutions, regulators and
users need to become more skilled about data protection and security requirements. Ineffective
solutions in this matter might derail smart city initiatives.
An effective data protection compliance framework requires simple and effective claims
procedures that kick in when harm has been caused to an individual, with flexible principles such
as openness, transparency, legality, consent, responsibility and proportionality.
Some of the challenges that we have here in Mexico are:






Ensuring security in the shipping and receiving of data
Guaranteeing a proper and lawful use of the data
Informing users about the usage of their data
Respecting the ARCO rights
Respecting the Protection of Personal Data Law
A proactive INAI and other state data prot. agencies
Security management is also critical for developing user trust and for protecting data flow over
smart city networks. Smart cities must develop protocols for securing access between the smart
city technology stack and other governmental or private systems, which require new
authentication processes, secure storage, access controls and privileges, data separation rules for
distinguishing operational data from personal or sensitive data and security products for smart
city solutions.
5. Financing:
Governments, investors, Telcos and technology vendors need to partner on a deeper level than
for traditional projects to ensure the successful delivery of the smart city vision. Government has
a potentially significant role to play in the financing of smart cities, including through publicprivate partnerships (PPP). These PPP projects may require to ensure that smart cities can
generate reasonable returns for private investors and become financially self-sustaining over
time.
8
INFORME DE COMISIÓN
The national shared wholesale network will be financed and deployed through a public-private
partnership deal between the Secretary of Transport and Communications (SCT) and the private
investor.
6. Conclusions:
Government, It industry and citizenship will be critical partners and will need to play a prominent
role for the outcome of smart cities. Regulations need to be revisited to address innovative use
of spectrum, effective means of data protection and security risk management, to promote user
trust in smartcities.
9
Anexo 2: Programa
2015 IEEE International Smart Cities Conference
25-­‐28 October 2015 Hilton Hotel, Guadalajara, MX
PROGRAM
Sunday, October 25th, 2015
Room
08:00-­‐08:15
08:15-­‐08:30
08:30-­‐08:45
08:45-­‐09:00
09:00-­‐09:15
09:15-­‐09:30
09:30-­‐09:45
09:45-­‐10:00
10:00-­‐10:15
10:15-­‐10:30
10:30-­‐10:45
10:45-­‐11:00
11:00-­‐11:15
11:15-­‐11:30
11:30-­‐11:45
11:45-­‐12:00
12:00-­‐12:15
12:15-­‐12:30
12:30-­‐12:45
12:45-­‐13:00
13:00-­‐13:15
13:15-­‐13:30
13:30-­‐13:45
13:45-­‐14:00
14:00-­‐14:15
14:15-­‐14:30
14:30-­‐14:45
14:45-­‐15:00
15:00-­‐15:15
15:15-­‐15:30
15:30-­‐15:45
15:45-­‐16:00
16:00-­‐16:15
16:15-­‐16:30
16:30-­‐16:45
16:45-­‐17:00
17:00-­‐17:15
17:15-­‐17:30
17:30-­‐17:45
17:45-­‐18:00
18:00-­‐18:15
18:15-­‐18:30
18:30-­‐18:45
18:45-­‐19:00
19:00-­‐19:15
19:15-­‐19:30
19:30-­‐19:45
19:45-­‐20:00
Mexico I B
Mexico III D
Europa Mexico III C
Mexico I A
America
Mexico Foyer / Mexico II
City Activity REGISTRY
REGISTRY
Tour 1 Fisrst approach to GDL Metropolitan Area in Tlaquepaque Visit. 80 seats
Smart Cities Hackathon Registry
IEEE Smart CitiesISC2 Steering Committe
Tutorial 1 Tutorial 5
Tutorial 2 Getting Civic With It: Winning Building an Embedded Linux Strategies for Inclusive and Distribution using Yocto. Effective Civic Engagement Alejandro Hernandez, Intel FRIEDA K. EDGETTE, MSc, ACC, GDC
Novos Consulting
Coffe Break
Coffe Break
Tutorial 3
Tutorial 4
Tutorial 6
Cloud Computing for Development of Mobile Smart Cities Applications in Android for Huaglory Tianfield, Smart Cities Sergio Ramirez, Glasgow Caledonian IEEE GDL Section University
Smart Cities Hackhaton
Coffe Break
Coffe Break
Tutorial 7
Tutorial 8
IEEE Smart Cities Steering Committe Smart Cities Exhibition Area (Registry continues)
IEEE Smart Cities New Analytics for Smart Phyton Programming for Smart Pilot Cities Kick Off Healthcare. Cities. Workshop Alberto de Obeso, IEEE GDL Section
Organization
Intel GDC Creating your own smart Mastering the Five Foundations helmet. of Smart Governance. Mario Santana Lopez, Intel FRIEDA K. EDGETTE, MSc, ACC, GDC
Novos Consulting Free Dinner Time on your own
Monday, October 26th, 2015
Room
Mexico I B
Mexico III D
Mexico III C
Europa-­‐America
Mexico I A
Asia
Mexico Foyer
08:00-­‐08:15
REGISTRY
08:15-­‐08:30
08:30-­‐08:45
08:45-­‐09:00
09:00-­‐09:15
09:15-­‐09:30
Roberto de Marca -­‐ Past IEEE President Keynote
“Smart Cities Government best practices” Objective: To present & brainstorm the challenges and iniciatives for the development of Smart Cities in Mexico 09:30-­‐09:45
09:45-­‐10:00
10:00-­‐10:20
Cofee Break
Cofee Break
Smart Transport Track (STR) Smart Integrated Grids Track Session Chair: Ryosuke Ando (SIG) Session Chair: Amor Farid
10:20-­‐10:40
10:40-­‐11:00
Mexico II
Opening Ceremony Jaime Reyes, Minister of Innovation, Science & Technology Jalisco State Enrique Alfaro, Mayor of Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico
Gilles Betis, leader of the IEEE Smart Cities
Yinhai Wang, Chairman of the Organizing Committee ISC2 2015 Diana Valadez, IEEE Guadalajara Section Chair
Victor M. Larios-­‐ Moderator
Smart Environment Track (SEV) Session Chair: Hassan Ali
STR Talk 1
SIG Talk 1
SEV Opening Remarks + Talk 1
"An IoT based scholar bus monitoring system" Juan Zambada et Al, Technological Institute of Culiacan, Mexico
"Power Outage Reporting Tool with Mobile App" Govinda Hosein et Al, The University of the West Indies, Trinidad and Tobago
STR Talk 2
"Effect of Car Driving on Quality of Life for Aged People" Yasuhide Nishihori et Al, TTRI (Toyota Transportation Research Institute), Japan
SIG Talk 2
SEV Talk 2
"Optimal Planning and "Design of Sensor Network for Operation of Distributed Energy Urban Micro-­‐Climate Monitoring" Resources Considering Mukesh Jha et Al, Masdar Institute, Uncertainty on Evs" Francisco United Arab Emirates
Martín et Al, Institute for Research in Technology (IIT), ICAI School of Engineering, Comillas Pontifical University, Spain
"Node Localization in Wireless Sensor Networks Based on Context Awareness" Alejandro De Gante et Al, CINVESTAV, Mexico
Special Sessions (SPS) Session Chair: Aris Gkoulalas-­‐Divanis
Special Session SPS1 Cyber Security in the Internet of Things and Smart Cities: Opening Remarks + Talk 1
"Efficient Algorithms for Identifying Privacy Vulnerabilities", Aris Gkoulalas-­‐
Divanis et Al, Smarter Cities Smart Cities Demostrative Exhibition Area Technology Centre IBM Smart Cities B2B Meetings with Smart Cities Exhibition Area Research – Ireland, Dublin, Hackathon Governments
Ireland
SPS 1 Talk 2
"Automatic Motion Tracking of a Human in a Surveillance Video", et Al, Department of Computer Science Umm Al-­‐Qura University, Saudi Arabia
11:00:-­‐11:20
STR Talk 3
Triggered, Directional Vehicular Communication, John Lindsay, Patent Attorney, United States of America
SIG Talk 3
"Privacy-­‐friendly Secure "Modeling, Simulation and Control Bidding Scheme for Demand of Water Supply System" Eduardo Response in Smart Grid" Cunha et Al, UFRN, Brazil
Mohammad Rahman et Al, KDDI R and D Laboratories Inc. Japan
11:20-­‐11:40
STR Taklk 4
SIG Talk 4
SEV Talk 4
"Identifying the Urban "Maximizing Renewable Energy "A Real-­‐time Ambient Air Quality Transportation corridor Based Use with Decentralized Monitoring Wireless Sensor Network on Mobile Phone Data" Residential Demand Response" for S chools i n S mart Cities" Hassan Yanwei Wang et Al, Tsinghua Ivana Dusparic et Al, Trinity Ali et Al, University of Newcastle, University, China
College Dublin, Ireland
Australia
11:40-­‐ 12:00
STR Talk 5
"A Smart Airspace Sectorization Approach Based on Spectral Clustering and NSGA-­‐II" Bang An et Al, Tsinghua University, China
12:00-­‐13:00
SPSpecial Session SPS2 Context Aware and Ubiquitous Computing: Openning Remarks + Talk 1
SEV Talk 3
"A Personalized Load B2B Meetings with Forecasting Enhanced by Governments
Activity Information", Yong Ding et Al, Institute of Telematics Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Karlsruhe, Germany
SPS 2 Talk 2
"Using Augmented Reality in Urban Context: Georeferenced System for Business Pannels & Selected Localization Using Google presentations
Glass",
Leonardo Ferrer et Al., ITAM Mexico
SPS 2 Talk 3
SIG Talk 5
SEV Talk 5
"A Smart Grid electricity market "Using Google Street View to map with Multiagents, smart the greeness of neighborhoods in appliances and Combinatorial Hartford, CT" Xiaojiang Li et Al, Auctions" Ramón Felipe Brena University of Connecticut, United Pinero et Al, Instituto States of America
Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey, Mexico
"Sequential Pattern Mining -­‐ a Study to Understand Daily Activity Patterns for Load Forecasting Enhancement", Yong Ding et Al, Institute of Telematics Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Karlsruhe, Germany
Lunch
Lunch
Session Chair: David Gomez Gutierrez
Session Chair: Martin J Loza-­‐
López Session Chair: Eduardo Solorzan-­‐Alor
STR Talk 6 SIG Talk 6
SEV Talk 6
Session Chair: Mark Fox
Special Session SPS3 Towards Standard Ontologies for City Industry Solutions: Knowledge: Opening remarks + Talk 1 Huawei Talk 1
"On the Completeness of "Safe Cities Based in Open City Data for Measuring IT Models" Pedro City Indicators" Mark Fox et Al, Gomez, CTO Huawei University of Toronto, Canada Enterprise Group Latin America
13:00-­‐13:20
"A Smart Destination "On-­‐line Optimization of the Initiative: the Case of a 2014 Power Amounts Supplied in a FIFA World Cup Host City" Microgrid Prototype: A Fixed-­‐
Andrea Cacho et Al, Federal Time Convergent Dynamical University of Rio Grande do System Approach" Juan Norte, Brazil
Diego Sanchez-­‐Torres, CINVESTAV, Mexico
STR Talk 7
SIG Talk 7
"Sustainable land use in the compact city: small green area effect on different urban fabrics" Andrea Tulisi et Al, Department of Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering -­‐ University of Naples Federico II, Italy
SEV Talk 7
SPS 3 Talk 2
13:20 -­‐13:40
"Reducing Emergency "Smart Solar Street Light with Services Response Time in an Efficient Control Algorithm" Smart Cities: An Advanced Abhilasha Jain et Al, Manipal Adaptive and Fuzzy Approach" Institute of Technology, India
Soufiene Djahel et Al, University College Dublin, Ireland
"An embedded system application to monitoring micro-­‐climates oriented to Smart Cities." Eduardo Solorzano Alor et Al, CIDETEC -­‐ IPN, Mexico "Models for sustainability" Maria-­‐Cristina Marinescu et Al, Barcelona Supercomputing Center, Spain
STR Talk 8
"Application Platforms for Smart Cities" Alberto Leon-­‐
Garcia et Al, University of Toronto, Canada
SIG Talk 8
SEV Talk 8
"Power Flow Steady-­‐State "Breathing Smarter: A Critical Look Model Analysis of Grid-­‐
at Representations of Air Quality Connected Plug-­‐in Electric Sensing Data Across Platforms and Vehicle Charging Stations" Publics" Lily Bui, Diana Paola Montoya Escobar et Massachusetts Institute of Al, Cinvestav Guadalajara Technology, USA
Women In Engineering Student Affinity Group, Mexico
14:00 -­‐14:20
STR Talk 9
"Visual Registration and Tracking for Traffic Monitoring" Sabrina Lizbeth Vega Maldonado et Al, Universidad de Guadalajara, Mexico
SIG Talk 9
"Distributed Energy Procurement and Management in Smart Environments" Jonathan Serrano et Al, Instituto Nacional de Astrofísica Óptica y Electrónica, Mexico
SEV Talk 9
"Urban Smart Shading Devices based on Traditional Gulf Design. Case study located in a district of a Hot Arid Climate City (Abu Dhabi)." Lindita Bande et Al, Polytechnic of Milan, Italy
SPS 3 Talk 4
"An Ontological approach to spatio-­‐temporal information modelling with applications in transportation" Alexey Seliverstov et Al, Faculdade de Engenharia da Universidade do Porto, Portugal
14:20 -­‐14:40
STR Talk 10
"Applying Semi-­‐Supervised Learning Method for Cellphone-­‐based Travel Mode Classification" Wenbo Zhu et Al, University of Washington, USA
SIG Talk 10
"The Smart Grid Consumer Collaborative’s Consumer Pulse Study -­‐ Citizen engagement and smart governance",Patty Durand, USA
SEV Talk 10
"Intelligent stormwater infrastructure using a RESTful cyber-­‐
physical systems architecture",Anil Ganti, University of Washington, Department of Electrical Engineering, Seattle, WA, United States of America/ SPS 3 Talk 5
"Toward Domain Knowledge Model for Smart City: the Core Conceptual Model", Junfeng Zhao and Yasha Wang, Key Laboratory of High Confidence Pannels & Selected presentations
Software Technologies, Ministry of Education, Beijing, China
13:40-­‐ 14:00
Coffee Break
14:40-­‐15:00
Session Chair: Rafael Perez-­‐
Jimenez
15:00 -­‐15:20
15.20-­‐15:40
Smart Cities Demostrative Exhibition Area STR Talk 11
"A Route Travel Time Distribution Prediction Method Based on Markov Chain" Daxin Tian et Al, Beihang Univeristy, China
Session Chair: Amor Farid
Coffee Break
Session Chair: Yichang James Tsai
SIG Talk 11
SEV Talk 11
" Tracing the Generation Source "Information-­‐Centric Green of Municipal Energy Loads: Infrastructure Planning to Reduce Towards Transparency in Climate Change Impacts: The Emission Climate Impacts Vulnerability Index Production/Reduction", Carol as Smart-­‐Growth Urbanism", Samuel Miller et Al, Wayne State Molnar, Michigan Sea Grant, Great University, United States of Lakes Commission, USA
America
STR Talk 12
SIG Talk 12
"A model based method of "Building the Most pedestrian abnormal behavior Interconnected and Smartest detection in traffic scene" Grid " Oscar Miranda,CTO Qianyin Jiang et Al, School of Electric grid Huawai Latin Engineering, Sun Yat-­‐sen America
University, China
Smart Cities Hackathon
SPS 3 Talk 3
"An Ontological Framework to support Evidence-­‐based Policy Making using Global City Indicators" Jane Hunter et Al, University of Queensland, B2B Meetings with Smart Cities Exhibition Area Smart Cities Demostrative Exhibition Area Australia
Governments
SEV Talk 12
"Non-­‐Ionizing Radiation Evaluation Emitted by FM Radio and TV Broadcasting Systems in El Crucero, Managu",Julio Cruz Icabalzeta et Al., Facultad de Electrotecnia y Computación, Universidad Nacional de Ingeniería, Managua, Nicaragua
Cofee Break
Workshop Chair: Natalia Villanueva
Smart Cities Exhibition Area Smart Cities Demostrative Exhibition Area WORKSHOP 3 IEEE Smart Cities New Core Smart Cyber Cities Kick Off Workshop Infrastructures Organization collaboration (IEEE Private Meeting)
oportunities
Special Session SPS4 Energy-­‐
Water Nexus: Opening Remarks SEV Talk 13
+ Talk 1
"Visible Light Communications "Extending the Energy-­‐Water "The Case Study of a Blueberry Technologies for Smart Nexus Reference Architecture to Smart Food Supply Chain", Diana Tourism Destinations" Rafael the Sustainable Development of Romero et Al, University of Perez-­‐Jimenez et Al, IDeTIC-­‐
Agriculture, Industry & Guadalajara, México/ ULPGC, Spain
Commerce" Amro Faridet et Al, MIT mechanical engineering, United Arab Emirates
STR Talk 13
15.40-­‐16:00
WORKSHOP 3 Smart Ciber Infrastructures Smart Cities Exhibition Area Smart Cities Demostrative Exhibition Area collaboration oportunities
Smart Cities Hackathon
16:00 -­‐16:20
STR Talk 14
"RIMAC Project: Open urban routing information system fed by real time reliable sources" Luis Camacho et Al, PUCP, Peru
SPS4 Talk 2
SEV Talk 15
"The Role of Resource Efficient "An Intelligent Remote Sensing and Decentralized Wastewater GIS-­‐enabled Asset Management Treatment in Smart Cities" Tariq System for the Urban Environment", Kaddoura et Al, ecoglobe GmbH, Yichang James Tsai and Zhaohua Germany
Wang, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
16:20 -­‐16:40
ODA Talk 0
"Quality of Experience (QoE) in the smart cities context: An Initial Analysis" Luis Guillermo Martinez, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden
SPS4 Talk 3
"Extending the Utility Analysis "Infrastructure consolidation for and Integration Model at the interconnected services in a Smart City Energy Water Nexus" Barry Liner using cloud environment", Jorge F Hernandez et Al, Unicersity of et Al, WEF, USA
IEEE Smart Cities New Core Cities Kick Off Workshop Organization (IEEE Private Meeting)
Guadalajara, México /
Cofee Break
Cofee Break 16:40 -­‐17:00
17:00-­‐17:15
17:15-­‐17:30
17:30-­‐17:45
17:45-­‐18:00
18:00-­‐18:15
18:15-­‐18:30
18:30-­‐18:45
18:45-­‐19:00
19:00-­‐19:15
19:15-­‐19:30
19:30-­‐19:45
19:45-­‐20:00
20:00-­‐20:15
20:15-­‐20:30
20:30-­‐20:45
20:45-­‐21:00
Industry In Smart Cities Plenary Pannel Session with IBM, Intel, Huawei, HP
Free Time Tour 2: Visit to GDL Downtown Smart City Project
Tuesday, October 27th, 2015
Room
08:00-­‐08:15
08:15-­‐08:30
08:30-­‐08:45
08:45-­‐09:00
09:00-­‐09:15
09:15-­‐09:30
09:30-­‐09:45
09:45-­‐10:00
10:00-­‐10:25
Mexico I B
Mexico III D
Mexico III C
SHB Talk 1
IOT Talk 1
"Coexistence of IEEE802.15.4 in “Transactional Properties of a Practical Implementation of a Compositions of Internet of Things Wireless Smart Home Services”, Krishnamurthy Environment (WSHE) for Vidyasankar, Department of Appliances Control" Stephane Computer Science Memorial Martin Nlom et Al, University of University, ST. John’s, Newfoundland, Johannesburg, South Africa
Canada
10:40-­‐11:00
STR Talk 16
"Drive for Intelligence: Transformative Factors in Smart City Development" Tuomo Kinnunen et Al, Industrial Engineering and Management Research Group, University of Oulu, Finland
SHB Talk 2
IoT Talk 2
"Landmark Mapping from “Towards an IoT Based Water Unbiased Observations" Jason S. Management System for a Campus”, Ku et Al, Department of Prachet Verma et Al, Indian Institute Mechanical Engineering MIT, of Science, Bangalore, India
Cambirdge Massachusetts, USA
STR Talk 17
"Smart Management of Next Generation Bike Sharing Systems using Internet of Things" Mohammad Abdur Razzaque et Al, School of Computer Science and Statistics, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
STR Talk 18
"Motion-­‐Vector Clustering for Traffic Speed Detection From UAV Video", Ruimin Ke et AL, University of Washington Seattle, WA, U.S.A.
SHB Talk 3
IoT Talk 3
"Street Lighting in Smart Cities: “Multidimensional Query for a Simulation Tool for the Design Internet of Things(IoT) networks”, of Systems based on Hemant Tiwari et Al, Samsung Narrowband PLC" Adele Sittoni Research India, Bangalore, India
et Al, University of Trento, Italy
STR Talk 19
"A Stereo Visual Odometry Based On SURF Feature And Three Consecutive Frames", Yong Ren et Al, Department of Automation, Tshinghua University, Beijing P. R. China
12:00-­‐13:00
Mexico Foyer
Mexico II
Roberto Saracco -­‐ Innovation in Smart Cities of the Future Keynote
Kirk Skeba -­‐Intelligent Transportation Sytems -­‐ Intel Labs Keynote
STR Talk 15
"Event-­‐Oriented Framework for Smart Transportation" Emmanuel Lopez Neri et Al, CIDETEC UVM GUADALAJARA SUR, Mexico
11:40-­‐ 12:00
Asia
Cofee Break
10:20-­‐10:40
11:20-­‐11:40
Mexico IA
REGISTRY
Smart Transtport Track (STR) Smart Homes & Buildings Track Internet of Things Track (IoT) Session Session Chair: Emmanuel (SHB) Session Chai:r Rongliang Chair: Krishnamurthy Vidyasankar
Lopez Neri
Zhou
11:00:-­‐11:20
Europa-­‐America
Lunch
SHB Talk 4
IoT Talk 4
"Energy saving in smart homes "Urban Operating Systems for based on consumer behavior: A Sensor Network Management in case study" Michael Zehnder et Smart Cities", Olga Mora and Victor Al, Institute of Business Larios, University of Guadalajara, Information Systems -­‐ University México
of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland (FHNW)
SHB Talk 5
IoT Talk 5
"An Architecture for the Analysis "Gabby Tree", Aditya Om, NIT Raipur, India
and Detection of Anomalies in Smart City WSNs" Victor Garcia et Al, Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Spain
Open Data & Governement Track (ODA) -­‐ Session Chair: Hector Ceballos ODA Opening Remarks + Talk 1
"Towards Dynamic Pricing for Digital Billboard Advertising Network in Smart Cities" Parisa Lak et Al, Ryerson University, Canada
ODA Talk 2
"Characterizing Evolutiono of Extreme Public Transit Behavior Using Smart Card Data", Zhiyong Cui et Al, Peking University, China
ODA Talk 3
Smart Cities "Visual Object Tracking via Hackathon Deep N eural N
etwork" Smart Cities Demostrative Exhibition Area WORKSHOP 4 Smart Cities Exhibition Area Smart Grid Solutions Tianyang Xu et Al, Jiangnan University, China
ODA Talk 4
"GeoSmart Cities: Geo-­‐
information and event-­‐driven geoprocessing as anablers of smart cities" Manuel Garcia Alvarez et Al, Facultity of Geo-­‐
Information Science and Earth Observation, Netherlands
ODA Talk 5
"Clustering Big Urban Dataset",Ahmad Al Shami et Al, The University of Warwick, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Lunch
Session Chair: Jing Pang
Smart Health Track (SHA) Session Chair: Agusti Solanas
SHB Talk 6
SHA Talk 1
"A Context-­‐Awareness "Hearing Aid devices for Smart Architecture for Managing Cities: A Survey" Eduardo Garcia-­‐
thermal energy in a nZEB. Espinosa et Al, Intel, Mexico
Integrating Semantic Sensor Nodes as Enabler of Smart Environments" Oscar Hernandez et Al, CIATEQ, A.C., Mexico
Session Chair: Oscar Hernandez
Session Chair: Kristian Kloeckl
13:00-­‐13:20
STR Talk 20
"Enabling Participatory Routing Using A Smart Routing Platform", Nicolás Cardozo et Al, Future Cities, DSG, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland 13:20 -­‐13:40
STR Talk 21
"Review of Fuzzy Logic in Intelligent Traffic Light Control",Jing Pang, Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Computer Engineering Program
California State University, Sacramento
Sacramento, CA, U.S.A
SHB Talk 7
SHA Talk 2
"Home Personalization Through "Mobile Applications Utilized for Rapsberry Pi" Sankha Karfa et the Prevention of Potential Al, M.S.Ramaiah Institute of Epidemics in Smart Cities" Raúl Technology, India
Beltrán et Al, Universidad de Guadalajara, Mexico
13:40-­‐ 14:00
STR Talk 22
"Usability Evaluation of Standing-­‐type Personal Mobility Devices for Elderly People", Naoki Sato, Department of Creative Engineering National Institute of Technology, Tsuruoka College, Japan
SHB Talk 8
"INDOOR PROPAGATION ANALYSIS APPLIED IN ZIGBEE NETWORKS" Diego Paul Chacón Troya et Al, Universidad Politécnica Salesiana, Ecuador
14:00 -­‐14:20
STR Talk 23
"Epidemic Routing in Vehicular Delay-­‐Tolerant Networks: the Use of Heterogeneous Conditions to Increase Packet Delivery Ratio" Roberto Hernández et Al, Tecnológico de Monterrey -­‐ Campus Querétaro, Mexico
SHB Talk 9
SHA Talk 4
"Towards a Fully Automated Wandering Detection Methods in Monitoring System for Manhole Smart Cities: Current and New Cover" Hesham Aly et Al, Approaches", Edgar Batista et Al, Staffordshire University, United Smart Health Research Group. Kingdom of Great Britain and Department of Computer Engineering Northern Ireland
and Mathematics
Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Catalonia, Spain
ODA Talk 9
"Towards an Ontology-­‐based Context Model for Smart City Operations", Adnane Ghannem et Al, Information Systems Department, Ahmed Bin Mohammed Military College, Doha, Qatar
14:20 -­‐14:40
STR Talk 24
"Towards Better Driver Gaze Estimation in Smarter Vehicles", Siti Mohd Zai, Faculty of Computing, Engineering and Science,Staffordshire University, Stoke-­‐On-­‐Trent, United Kingdom SHB Talk 10
"DEWA's Smart Solution to Mitigate the Substation Fire Incident in Dubai Substation" Islam Abuhamdah et Al, Dubai Electricity and Water Authority (DEWA), United Arab Emirates
SHA Talk 5
"Context-­‐Aware Recommender for Smart Health",Fran Casino et Al, Smart Health Research Group. Department of Computer Engineering and Mathematics
Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Catalonia, Spain ODA Talk 10
"Frame standardization for Smart Cities monitoring applications", Miguel Sánchez Meraz et Al, Telecommunications Department, National Polytechnic Institute, Mexico City Session Chair: Meng Li
14:40-­‐15:00
15:00 -­‐15:20
15.20-­‐15:40
15.40-­‐16:00
16:00 -­‐16:20
WORKSHOP 5 High Performance Smart Cities Exhibition Area Smart Cities Demostrative Exhibition Area Computing for Smart Cities
ODA Talk 8
"Language Design for Developing Smart Adaptive Services" Nicolás Cardozo and Siobhan Clarke , Future Cities, DSG, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland Cofee Break
Session Chair: Liming Bai
Session Chair: Chun Wang
Special Session SPS5 Smart and Connected Vehicles: Opening Remarks + Talk 1
SHB Talk 11
SHA Talk 6
"A Combinatorial Auction for Cost "Prediction of the shortest "System-­‐oriented Approach to Reduction in City Home Health travel time based on Smart Cities" Ondrej Pribyl et Al, Care", Zhijie Xie and Chun Wang, intersection delay", Xin Cheng Czech Technical University in Concordia Institute for Information et Al, School of Information Prague, Faculty of Systems Engineering
Engineering, Chang´an Transportation Sciences, Czech Concordia University, Montreal, University, Xi´an, China Republic
Canada SPS5 Talk2 SHB Talk 12
SHA Talk 7
"DEVELOPING SUSTAINABLE HEALTH "Visual Odometry for On-­‐Road "IoT framework for Smart Buildings with Cloud FRAMEWORKS IN SMART CITIES", Vehicles Based on Trifocal Computing" Jesus Pacheco et Al, Inas Khayal, The Dartmouth Institute Tensor", Hai-­‐Gen Min et Al, The University of Arizona, United of Health Policy & Clinical Practice,
Department of Traffic Geisel School of Medicine, Information Engineering and States of America
Dartmouth College, USA
Control, Chang´an university, Xi´an, China
SPS5 Talk3
SHB Talk 13
SHA Talk 8
"A License Plate Recognition "Indoor CO2 level control using "A Smart Health hybrid cloud Algorithm Under Low wearables",Syam Sidhardhan, solution for “Breast Cancer” Illumination Environment", Jia-­‐ Samsung Research Institute, treatment by using Big Data Le Zhao et Al, Department of Bangalore, India visualization use case, implementing Traffic Information an efficient image processing with Engineering, Chang´an the use of leading edge University, Xi´an, China
technologies",Manuel Avalos et Al, IBM, México
STR Talk 27
SHB Talk 14
TCS iCity Lab, Singapore Management University, Singapore
16:40 -­‐17:00
17:00-­‐17:15
17:15-­‐17:30
17:30-­‐17:45
17:45-­‐18:00
18:00-­‐18:15
18:15-­‐18:30
18:30-­‐18:45
18:45-­‐19:00
ODA Talk 7
"Tool theory and the urban data medium: Data driven visual tools for urban energy" Kristian Kloeckl, Northeastern University, Uniited States of Smart Cities Hackathon America
Coffee Break
Session Chair : Hui Fei
"Smart Streets – A Multifunction Management Infrastructure to "SHINESenior: Personalized Smart Cities" Context, Romildo Services for Active Ageing-­‐in-­‐
Bezerra et Al, IFBA, Brazil
Place ", Liming Bai et Al, SMU-­‐
16:20 -­‐16:40
SHA Talk 3
"Ubiquitous Monitoring of Human Sunlight Exposure in Cities" Ahmad Al Shami et Al, Warwick Institute for the Science of Cities, The University of Warwick, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
ODA Talk 6
"TwitterJam: Identification of mobility patterns in urban centers based on Tweets" Francisco Rebelo et Al, FEUP, University of Porto, Portugal
STR Talk 30
SHB Talk 15
"Cluster & Zone Based Speed "District of Future – DoF, open Control System", Sunny Sharan framework for the generation and Syam Sidhardhan, and optimization of energy Samsung R&D Institute, consumption in district Bangalore, India
environments" Rubén Cánovas Mas et Al., EVERIS, Barcelona Spain ODA Talk 11
"Deep Learning for Big Data: Challenges and Opportunities", Xiaojun Wu, Jiangnan University, China
STR Talk 25
"THE LPR SYSTEMS TESTS", Zhi Smart Cities Hackathon Yu e t A
l, S chool o f Engineering, Sun Yat-­‐sen University, China
Smart Cities Exhibition Area STR Talk 26
"Bottleneck Pattern Study for Urban Expressway Using Big Traffic Data", Han Jiang et Al, Tsinghua University, China
Smart Manufacturing and Logistics Track SML Talk 1
"On Computational Infraestruture Requirements to Smart and Autonomic Cities Framework" Romildo Bezerra et Al, IFBA, Brazil
SML Talk 2
"Auction Model for Mass Customization of Logistics", Wei Yan and Chun Wang, Concordia Institute for Information Systems Engineering
Concordia University, Montreal, Canada
WORKSHOP 6 Curricular Desing for Smart Cities
Smart Cities Demostrative Exhibition Area STR Talk 28
"Open data for intelligent transportation systems studies: opportunity and challenge",Yuangchang Deng and Renxin Zhong, Sun Yat-­‐Sen University, China / STR Talk 29
"Using Gamification to Incentivize Sustainable Urban Mobility" Raman Kazhamiakin et Al, Fondazione Bruno Kessler, Italy
Cofee Break Cofee Break
IEEE Core Smart Cities Prospective Plenary Pannel Free Time
19:00-­‐19:15
19:15-­‐19:30
19:30-­‐19:45
19:45-­‐20:00
20:00-­‐20:15
20:15-­‐20:30
20:30-­‐20:45
Gala Dinner in Mexico II Hackathon finalist presentations and winners selection 1st Awarded Paper announcement
New Smart Cities Students Awarded
Presentation from Sunfor Light CTO 20:45-­‐21:00
21:00-­‐21:15
21:15 -­‐21:30
21:30-­‐21:45
21:45-­‐22:00
Wednesday, October 28th, 2015
Room
08:00-­‐08:15
08:15-­‐08:30
Mexico I B
Mexico III D
Mexico III C
Europa/America
Mexico I A
Asia
08:30-­‐08:45
08:45-­‐09:00
09:00-­‐09:15
REGISTRY
SHB Talk 16
"Dwelling characterization and thermal disaggregation of residential smart meter data: A state-­‐space system identification approach", Gord Stephen et Al, Department of Environment and Resource Studies ,University of Waterloo, Canada SCZ Talk 1
"3cixty: An Innovative Way to Explore Cities",Catalin-­‐Mihai Barbu et Al, Gerrman Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI), Germany / 11:00:-­‐11:20
Session Chair: Alex Buckman IoT Talk 6
"Smart Cities Platforms and Applications", Dr. John Jiang, VESS, LLC, United States of America
10:40-­‐11:00
SHB Talk 17
SCZ Talk 2
SHB Talk 18
SCZ Talk 3
"A Collaborative, Interdisciplinary Initiative for a Smart Cities Innovation Network", Natalia Villanueva-­‐
Rosales et Al, Smart Cities Innovation Center, CUCEA
University of Guadalajara
Zapopan, Mexico
11:40-­‐ 12:00
SCZ2 Talk 2
SCZ2 Talk 4
SCZ2 Talk 5
Lunch
IEEE Smart Cities MOOCs Strategy Plenary Pannel Session
*This is a preliminary program and its content may change without notice.
Smart Cities Exhibition Area Smart Cities Demostrative Exhibition Area "Research of new planning layout model which can be described as low investment high security Northwest district of Beiwei in Lecong town Foshan city Guangdong province as a case", Wu Wenyuan and Liu Xiaoyan, Shenzhen APECLAND DESIGN CO.,LTD, Shenzhen, China Shenzhen, China/ Lunch
Closing Ceremony + IEEE GDL Toast -­‐ Celebrating 25 Years Smart Cities Exhibition Area Smart Cities Demostrative Exhibition Area SCZ2 Talk 3
"Tourist app for Smart TVs Envisioning a Smart City", Luis Leonardo Camargo et Al, College of Engineering, University of Magdalena,Santa Marta, Colombia
SCZ Talk 4
WORKSHOP 8 WORKSHOP 7 Smart Cities Postgraduate Smart Food UDG -­‐ MIT Media Hackathon Students Workshop Lab City Farm for Smart Cities
"Territorial smartness and the relevance of the learning ecosystems" Carlo Giovannella et Al, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Italy
SHB Talk 19
13:00-­‐14:30
14:30-­‐15:00
SCZ2 Talk 1
"Social Networks in Smart Cities: Comparing evaluation models" Leonidas Anthopoulos et Al, Business School, TEI of Thessaly, Greece
"From Old Grid to Smart Grid: The Economic Impact on the Electricity Customer", Alfredo Castellanos, S&C Electric Company " A Smart City model based on citizen-­‐sensors", Jesús Cano et Al, UNED University & IEEE eGovernment, Spain
12:00-­‐13:00
Smart Citizens Track II (SCZ2) Session Chair: Manuel Avalos
"Optimising building design for "The role of hackathons in Smart smart grid efficiency", Steve Jubb Cities",Manuel Avalos Vega and Maya et Al, Department of Civil and Alba, IBM, México Structural Engineering
University of Sheffield,
Sheffield, U.K.
"SmartHopper", Nicolás Cardozo et "Smart Community for the Smart Governance of the Urban Al, Future Cities, DSG, Trinity College Environment" Carmela Gargiulo Dublin, Ireland et Al, University of Naples "Federico II", Italy
11:20-­‐11:40
Gilles -­‐ Betis IEEE Smart Cities Chair Keynote
Cofee Break
Smart Citizens Track I (SCZ1) Session Chair: Marcus Wigam
10:20-­‐10:40
Mexico II
Carlos Saucedo IBM Smarter Cities Challenge -­‐ Vicepresidence, Global Citizenship Initiative, Keynote
09:15-­‐09:30
09:30-­‐09:45
09:45-­‐10:00
10:00-­‐10:20
Mexico Foyer
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